Will Calhoun: Native Lands (2006)

How we rate: our writers tend to review music they like within their preferred genres.

On Native Lands, the electronics of drum programming and guitar loops mix convincingly with indigenous acoustic instruments from around the world. Will Calhoun is able to combine such seemingly disparate sounds, styles and even people into one landscape and still maintain the integrity of the album as a whole. It may be due to the unifying thread throughout, Calhoun's honest rhythmic experiments, as well as the varied cast joining the effort: Pharoah Sanders, Mos Def, Kevin Eubanks, Stanley Jordan, Orrin Evans, Wallace and Antoine Roney, and Naná Vasconcelos, among others.

The combination of electronic and acoustic works well on tracks like the cover of Wayne Shorter's "Nefertiti, where Calhoun employs drum loops and "sonic textured ambiance while Sanders' tenor and Wallace Roney's muted trumpet unmistakably recall the original. Some Calhoun originals, such as "Dorita and "Naked, seem to be borderline smooth jazz, but the improvisation, especially Sanders' on the latter, is undeniably honest and soulful. On "Pyramids, the tenor legend seems right at home amid the electronic swirling of Eubanks' distorted guitar loops.

Native Lands is a two-disc set with a DVD that features Calhoun commenting about the influences on the album's music, the production of each track, and still and video footage taken on his travels synched to pieces like "Umoja.